Pet peeves with Common Core Standards 1

In general, I really, really like the Common Core Standards for math. There is some emphasis and explicit mentions of mental math skills, there is emphasis on conceptual understanding -- even a mention of the "bar models" (though they were called line diagrams) -- yet fluency of math facts and of the four operations are included as well.

So I'm not really complaining here! But I've found a few little things there, pet peeves of mine, if you allow, that I don't quite follow, so I thought of posting such here and seeing if any of you have some ideas for me.

Here's one for 5th grade.

5.OAAnalyze patterns and relationships.

3. Generate two numerical patterns using two given rules. Identifyapparent relationships between corresponding terms. Form orderedpairs consisting of corresponding terms from the two patterns, andgraph the ordered pairs on a coordinate plane. For example, given therule "Add 3" and the starting number 0, and given the rule "Add 6" and thestarting number 0, generate terms in the resulting sequences, and observethat the terms in one sequence are twice the corresponding terms in theother sequence. Explain informally why this is so.

In other words, in the example students would generate two skip-counting sequences:

0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30, 33, 36

and

0, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42, 48, 54, 60, 66, 72

These are of course very familiar to students from third grade when they learned their multiplication tables.

THEN, we make ordered pairs from these:

(0,0), (3,6), (6,12), (9,18), (12,24), (15,30), (18,36), (21,42), (24,48), (27,54), and so on, and plot them in the coordinate plane.

Then we observe that in each ordered pair the second number is double the first number.

The part I don't get is... NORMALLY, I think, leading into linear functions, we would form ordered pairs using 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. as our x-values and then calculate the y-values using the "pattern" or "rule" of doubling, for example, and get 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, etc. The ordered pairs would be
(0,0), (1,2), (2,4), (3,6), (4,8), (5,10), etc. The ordered pairs could be written in a table as well, and the rule given as y = 2x.

That would also tie in with the work students do with the coordinate graph, because another standard for 5th grade says:Represent real world and mathematical problems by graphing pointsin the first quadrant of the coordinate plane, and interpret coordinatevalues of points in the context of the situation.

And I assume we would use simple linear functions as our "mathematical problems" here.

But what do we gain from forming these ordered pairs in this manner, and then noting that there is a doubling taking place? You can notice the doubling without graphing the ordered pairs... and the ordered pairs don't as easily connect with the function y = 2x as if you used counting numbers as your x-coordinates.

Or what if one of the rules is "add 3", starting at 0, and the other is "subtract 5", starting at 100? Then we get ordered pairs

(0,100), (3,95), (6,90), (9,85), (12,80), (15,75), (18,70), (21,65), (24,60), (27,55), and so on. What are we supposed to notice here?

Or what if one of the rules is "add 3", starting at 0, and the
other is "multiply by 2", starting at 1? Then we get ordered pairs

(0,1),
(3,2), (6,4), (9,8), (12,16), (15,32), (18,64), (21,128), (24,256),
(27,512) and so on. What are we supposed to learn here?

Let me know your thoughts!

=========================================

UPDATE:

Thanks for those who responded. I'm going to make a video lesson about this exact topic today, and this is what I've chosen to do. I basically have space and time for about 4 examples.

I was going to start with the two rules of "add 1", and "add 2", generating a list of ordered pairs (0, 0), (1, 2), (2, 4), etc. and plotting them, noting it makes a linear pattern in the coordinate plane.

Then another example with rules "add 3, starting at 0" and "subtract 2, starting at 30" so I get ordered pairs (0, 30), (3, 28), (6, 26), (9, 24), etc. and this also makes a linear pattern in the coordinate plane. The actual function is y = 30 - (2/3)x by the way but I can't mention that in 5th grade.

THEN we do it the other way around: I will show already plotted points on the coordinate plane (that are in a linear pattern), write the ordered pairs from the points, and observe that there is a simple rule for the x-coordinates (such as add 3 starting from 3) and for the y-coordinates (such as subtract 2 starting from 26)

I think the example y = x2 is also worth noting (or some other non-linear function).

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